Living in Manchester
59 neighbourhoods · 295 sub-areasManchester, with around 590,000 people, is one of the UK's largest cities and a genuine northern powerhouse for renters. A 2-bed flat runs about £1,200 a month — roughly in line with the UK median but well under half what you'd pay in central London. Rents rose around 3% last year, so it's not standing still.
Best for…
Pick a renter archetypeArea overview
Skim every section on this page in one scroll. Each card gives an overall rating plus the headline stats — tap any heading to jump to the full section with charts, breakdowns and methodology.
Rent runs at £1,348 a month — 23% above the national median.
9 primary schools within a 1.5 km walk, 100% Good or better; 14 secondaries within a 4 km bus catchment, 75% Good or better.
Strong transport links — 92/100; nearest rail station is around 1582 m away; Manchester is reachable in 22 minutes by direct train.
What's around the typical neighbourhood — pubs, cafés, restaurants and supermarkets within walking distance, plus the median GP and hospital proximity.
Census 2021 snapshot: family-aged profile (25% under 18).
Living in Manchester
Manchester's a proper big city — around 590,000 people — with a dense centre, a tram network that covers large parts of the city, and a job market that draws people in from across the North West. It suits young professionals, students, and anyone who wants urban energy without London prices. The city's also a net job creator: around 453,000 jobs for roughly 0.8 jobs per working-age resident, which means competition for decent work is real but manageable.
The renter base skews young. Over a third of residents are aged 18 to 34 — well above the national average — and the city has a strong graduate retention rate off the back of its universities. Private renters make up around a third of households, with a similar share in social housing. Families and longer-term residents tend to cluster in areas like Didsbury, Chorlton, and Levenshulme in the south, where there's more space and a calmer feel. Inner-city areas attract sharers and young professionals.
A 2-bed flat costs around £1,200 a month. A 1-bed is closer to £990, and a 3-bed around £1,400. Council tax (Band D) runs to roughly £2,310 a year — about £193 a month on top of rent. The median house price is around £247,000, and the data suggests it takes a typical renter about four years to save a deposit, which is relatively fast by UK city standards. The trade-off is that rent takes a very large bite of take-home pay — around 69% for a median earner, which is stretched even by UK norms.
The honest catch: Manchester's deprivation score is high. The city sits in the second decile nationally on the Index of Multiple Deprivation, meaning most parts of the city rank among the 20% most deprived in England. That's not evenly spread — there are prosperous neighbourhoods — but it does affect school quality, street-level safety in some areas, and the overall feel of the city outside the regenerated centre.
Similar cities to Manchester
Cities with the closest profile to Manchester on rent, salary, safety, schools, jobs and density. Click any pair to compare side-by-side.
All areas in Manchester
Every local area, ordered by crawl priority. Most readers want the neighbourhood-level view — these are for deep-link cases or external search-engine arrivals.
- Manchester 057B
- Manchester 063B
- Manchester 028A
- Manchester 023E
- Manchester 007B
- Manchester 008D
- Manchester 063D
- Manchester 022E
- Manchester 019A
- Manchester 024B
- Manchester 055A
- Manchester 064C
- Manchester 019E
- Manchester 028B
- Manchester 015C
- Manchester 006D
- Manchester 022H
- Manchester 024D
- Manchester 036C
- Manchester 063A
Showing 20 of 295 areas. Drill into any neighbourhood above for the full area list.